Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, January 14, 1969 Pdge Twc, THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Tuesda-fyI. - Janu-ary 14I ,. 1969 SAME '1829' SHOW: Inauguration costs soar' theatre A fair quartet on sex emu players ser ies- WASHINGTON (A) - The bill for the Presidential inau- guration of Richard M. Nixon on Jan. 20 may run nearly $400,000 and up to this point the -sta'r. has had no say in the largely automatic arrangements for the nation's one hour of pomp and pageantry. It all started the month be- fore the election with self-pro- pelled plans that go into effect every four years without any- one doing much about it. Work on Capitol Hill is very nearly completed. A vast wood- en platform 18 incies off the ground and half again as large as a football field has been built in front of the Capitol and rows of benches erected on it. A false front has been built over the main steps, with the white-columned portico on which Nixon will be sown in and flanked by more seats for important guests. A steel-girded; six-tiered tower for television and news cameramen faces it. The construction will provide seats for 18,300 people. There has been little b a s i c chRange in. the, construction of the inaugural stands and seat- ing areas for 40 years. It's just bigger and more expensive . .the ceremony itself has followed the. same general course since An- drew Jackson was sworn in in 1829, the first president to take the oath on the east portico of the Capitol. The capital was New York City when G e o r g e Washington began it all in 1789, and he remains the only Presi- dent who traveled to his inaug- ural by barge, a very fance one, built to carry him across the bay from New, Jersey.4 Nearly every President has contributed something to the *Inaugural ceremony, although, sometiMes the precedent-hunt- ers have to look sharply to de- termine what it is. John Quincy Adams' contri- bution was that he was the first President to be sworn in wearing trousers, rather than the tight breeches of the era. Jackson attracted the first big crowd of spectators from all parts of the country to his in- auguration in 1829. He made. them happy by walking with them all the way from t h e White House to the Capitol. A crowd estimated at 20,000 pushed into the White House for a reception after Jackson's in- auguration, standing on the tab- les and breaking large amounts of china and glassware in an ef- fort to share in the refreshments. Jackson, besides starting the practice of holding the inaugu- ral ceremony on the Capitol's east portico, was the first out- going President to accompany his' successor from the White House to the Capitol for the swearing-in. The inauguration of James K. Polk in 1845 was the first to be covered by telegraph. Sam- uel F. B. Morse himself perched on the edge of the platform and tapped out Polk's words. The contractor who built the platform for the Polk ceremony turned in a bill for $164.17 for the job. It included $76 for carpentry, $8.70 for nails, $2.50 for hauling and $2.25 for iron fastenings. The lumber was val- ued at half-price - $74.42 - because the contractor got to keep it for re-use. That same practice is still followed. By 1853, when Franklin Pierce was inaugurated, the same contrac- tor had run his bill up to $647, and four years later it reached $887 for James Buchanan's swearing-in. Pierce's inauguration was marked by a protest demonstra- tion worthy of today's m os t audacious militants. As the us- ual throng waited along Penn- sylvania Avenue for the inat- gural parade to pass, a band of poor, unemployed men streamed onto the avenue and began marching. A contemporary newspaper account, describing them as "dressed in rags and tatters," reported that spectators ran out and drove them off the parade route. The first big security scare arose at Abraham Lincoln's in- auguration in 1861. The South having seceded and the Civil War imminent, an attack on the new President was feared and soldiers surrounded his carriage so closely on "the way to the Capitol few could see him. Armed men watched from the House and Senate wings as he spoke. There was another scare in 1877 when Rutherford B. Hayes won his contested electoral vote victory over Samuel-Tilden, the Democratic candidate who had gotten the most popular votes. LSA faculty halts meeting (Continued from Page 1) In November, the faculty re- ceived petitions distributed by Student Government Council and the Radical Caucus, signed by 3,500 students demanding an end to language and other distribution requirements. SGC President Michael Koeneke said his organization was not able to agree with the Radical Caucus on tactics for yesterday's meet- ing. "We didn't want any harden- ing of positions. We decided that closing down meetings would put us behind." Koeneke emphasized, however, that SGC and the Radical Caucus will continue to work together in the campaign to abolish required courses, the language requirement in particular. The college's executive commit- tee will meet tomorrow and prob- ably will decide then whether to reschedule faculty discussion of the degree requirements. The next regular meeting of the faculty is Feb. 3. Several professors expressed dissatisfaction with the meeting's outcome. Prof. George Piranian of the mathematics department said, "We might hope that next time'both sides could be more diplomatic." By MICHAEL ALLEN Robert Anderson's You Know I Can't Hear You When The Water's Running is described in the brochure as a quartet, but the movements have little in common. If you don't mind being teased in this way then you can have an enjoyable eve- ning. The first play is, farce and there are some hilarious lines. Rand Mitchell plays the part of a playwright who feels it im- perative that the public see a naked man and his toothbrush walk downstage, looking ridicu- lus but humanly familiar: that is, he feels it is his duty to give people a "shock of recognition," a sense of the real. His producer (Sherman Lloyd) argues against the propriety of this, and so they rehearse the offending scene with an elderly actor des- perately looking for a job and willing to do anything (King Donovan). The outcome is a sustained series of ludicrous lines and expressions, with Don- ovan timing it well nigh per- fectly each time. However, one cannot take the conflict be- tween playwright and producer seriously, and the human body is simply there to be laughed at in a conventional' way. The next play is farcical (though it's not successful), on- ly now it's about sex and I suppose it's a little wiser. At least we feel the middle aged male, played by Donovan much as he piayed the first part, knows more about his marriage than his silly partner (Imogene Coca), who is bent on abandon- ing the good old 54-inch double bed of 20 years standing. However, it's the third play that goes the deepest and offsets the others by plunging into the darker sides of sex and the jungle of feelings that sur- rounds our responses to our own bodies and to other peoples'. In this play Donovan is forced by his wife, again neatly played by Miss Coca, to discuss first of all his son's masturbating and then, as the tension rises, his daughter's virginity and, final- ly, his own marriage. We are being forced to realize that the human body cannot be laughed at beyond a certain point. More than that, that is cannot be talked about "rationally," as his stupid wife insists on talk- ing about it and its emotions. Anderson plucks chords here that find no corresponding echo in other movements. The last play is short, sharp, and sweet, but is little more than an amusing envoi, in which a married couple in extreme old age discuss themselves and their other marriages all in a great muddle. Without the third movement,, this play would have been a lightweight affair; with it, it becomes strangely ambiguous. It makes us feel that laughing doesn't go very deep at all, be- lying in fact our response to the surrounding material. THE HOUSE OF BERNARDA ALBA -a fiery drama of Spanish women January 15-19 Quirk Auditorium For Reservations Call 482-3453 (Weekdays, 12:45-4:30 p.m.) AlI Seats Reserved at $1.75 IKTITAF COME TO Student BookService and visit PETE SHERMAN SAND RE A DON BREITER I __ __I PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM FINAL PERFORMANCE TONIGHT! WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM presents ERZY KOSINSKI TODAY *10 A.M.-Noon Office Hours-1631 Haven t I~ Hal . 4 P.M. Peter Lorre's "M"-Arch. Aud. 4:10 P.M. "The Writer and Collectivity: The Soviet Dilemma "-Aud. D, Angell Hall 111 I 5:30 P.M. Dinner with Russian Center 8 P.M'. "Montage in Cinema & Modern Fiction Ref. to Film "M" Rackham Amphitheatre * Call for personal or grou appointments- 764-7442 n 11 F. 'ii I I Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 764-0558 moo= { Shows at 1 :00-3:00 5:00, 7:10 & 9:15 ii STEVE MVCCIJEEI' AS, TBLLUTT' D~etective Lt. Frank I~u~ift--som~ JANUARY 25 TO FEBRUARY 8 TOMORROW IS LADIES DAY 75c for Ladies until 6 P.M. I ,;'11 SUiG6ESTEQ PFOR MATURE AUDCIENCES EC RICDLfRem MUWIER BIO.-SEVEI ARTS W NEXT ATTRACTION MIfOW!" -GeORGe HARRsc . pan The Creative Arts Festival provides for the University community an opportunity to exper- - - -._- / . .L I- - -...1 w.as - - - - - 11 I II